Showing posts with label Hydro-electic power. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hydro-electic power. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Laos Eyes To Become Asean's Major Electricity Producer

VIENTIANE, Feb 17 (Bernama) -- Laos plans to put four hydro-power plants into operation this year, thus accelerating economic growth of the country, Vietnam news agency cited the Ministry of Energy and Mining as saying on Tuesday.

In an effort to become a major electricity producer of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), the Lao government signed numerous memoranda of understanding to supply electricity for Vietnam, Thailand and Cambodia.

The four hydro power plants are the 615MW Nam Ngum 2 plant, the 100MW Nam Lik 1-2 plant in Vientiane province, the 2.4MW Nam Nhon plant in Luang Namtha and Bo Keo provinces, and the 2.4MW Nam Theun 2 plant in Khammuone province.

The land-locked country is also developing other hydro-power plants, including the US$232 million Vietnamese-invested Sekaman 3 plant with a capacity of 210 MW in Sekong province, and the 1,410MW plant in Luang Prabang province which is invested with US$2 billion by the PetroVietnam Power.

Laos is planning 17 hydro-power plants and conducting feasibility study for 45 others.

The country has invested some US$4.1 billion in electricity sector since 2001.

Thursday, November 05, 2009

Japan courts leaders from Mekong River region

By John Ruwitch

HANOI, Nov 5 (Reuters) - A jostle for influence in Southeast Asia's emerging Mekong River region moves up a notch this week when Japan hosts leaders from five countries where China and other players have ramped up aid and investment.

The two-day event in Tokyo will focus on sustainable development and climate change in a region that includes Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam.

The Mekong River snakes through a last frontier of emerging Asia, scarred by war and anti-colonial struggles, a region viewed as strategic for its proximity to shipping lanes and abundant natural resources.

In recent decades, Tokyo has been the biggest outside source of aid to the sub-region, whose combined population exceeds 220 million and with a total GDP of more than $400 billion. Japanese companies were also among the earliest foreign investors.

But China's global quest for resources, and its outward investment drive of the past decade or so, have enlarged its presence in Southeast Asia.

"The Japanese realise -- they've realised for a long time -- that they are just being totally outmanoeuvred by the Chinese," said Richard Cronin, Director of the Southeast Asia programme at the Henry L. Stimson Center, a think tank in Washington, D.C.

One of the world's major river systems, the Mekong starts in the Tibetan plateau and runs 4,800 km through China and Southeast Asia. China will not be present at the summit.

DEVELOPING HYDROPOWER

The summit will discuss promoting development, while tackling environment and climate change, cross-border problems such as infectious disease, and promoting tourism, a Japanese Foreign Ministry official told reporters on Wednesday.

He downplayed the notion of competition. "We don't need to compete with others. If the region is developed, it will be beneficial to them as well as to us."

Japan's new government has been keen to tackle climate change issues and at a meeting of Japan-Mekong foreign ministers last month, they discussed developing hydropower in a way that would protect the environment and biodiversity.

Scientists say a cascade of dams on the upper Mekong in China and further downstream, some being funded by China, threaten to alter the waterway that directly sustains some 60 million people through agriculture and fishing.

Since the early 1990s, Japan has led the way in funding the Asian Development Bank's (ADB) Greater Mekong sub-region programme, which has built roads and other infrastructure. This, analysts say, has laid the groundwork for cross-border economic corridors linking the capitals and major cities.

Lately, China has gotten into the act. In Cambodia, for instance, Japan remains the biggest donor but China has become the largest foreign investor. Prime Minister Hun Sen recently hailed China as his country's best friend.

Chinese companies have been investing aggressively in Laos and Myanmar, as well, building dams, harvesting timber, and participating in mining projects. It is the third biggest investor in Laos and the fourth in Myanmar, Xinhua reported.

Chinese government aid generally has come without strings attached, making it an attractive choice for some governments in the region, analysts say.

Beyond the economics, Cronin believes "it's about the issue of Asian regionalism. Is it a real thing? Is it going to happen? And if it happens, who is going to be in charge of it, or who's got the advantage?"

(Additional reporting by Yoko Nishikawa, Ben Blanchard in Beijing and Ek Madra in Cambodia; Editing by Bill Tarrant)

Thursday, April 03, 2008

Laos' battle with poverty

02 April 2008, Wednesday
Syed Nazakat
Merinews (India)


Laos, better known for it’s tragic history, is now reeling under abject poverty, as two out of three people living under poverty line. People in extreme poverty without electricity or access to basic facilities of life like clean drinking water.

LAOS REMAINS one of the poorest countries in Asia, where two out of three people live in abject poverty. Now the country is opening up to the outside world, after years of political seclusion – but is the government ready to uplift its poor people?

Lao farmers like Pheng Tanisay are struggling to make a living

It was still mid-morning in Vientiane when we arrived at a small village, Dongsavath, just about half an hour drive outside the city. We came over dusty and pot-holed roads, passing women and children walking barefoot with water jugs. In this rice-growing region of a poor, landlocked country in Laos, families cling to life on an unforgiving terrain. This year has been a lot more difficult than usual because the rains have failed.

One man we met at the front of his hut had nine children. His small farm plot, not quite half a hectare in all, would be too small to feed his family even if the rains had been plentiful. This year, because of the little rain, he would get almost nothing. But Pheng Tanisay, 62, is not an ordinary man. He is the village president of the Lao Front for National Construction (LFNC), a mass organisation, which oversees religious policy and helps in the developmental work in Laos. I asked him about how he was doing. He said when he looked around, he felt happy and satisfied. “At least I am earning something. There are people out here who have nothing,” said Tanisay.

He crouched on a stool, close to the small fire being tended by his wife. She reached into her apron and pulls out a handful of semi-rotten millets, which was the basis for the gruel that she prepared for the meal that evening. It was one of the meals children had that day.

Like its neighbour, Cambodia, Laos is known for its tragic past. During the Vietnam War in 1975, it became the most bombed country in history and that has left a legacy of poverty and underdevelopment. Even though Laos has been a one-party state since 1975, but the Lao people have not flourished. The plight of Laos has been rightly described by the Asian Development Bank (ADB) in its latest report, which says that nearly six million people in Laos, two out of three live in abject poverty, living on less than two dollars a day. Laos remains a country with a primitive infrastructure. It has no railroads, a rudimentary road system, and limited telecommunications, though the government is sponsoring major improvements in the road system with possible support from Japan. Outside the capital, many people live without electricity or access to basic facilities of life like clean drinking water. Agriculture, dominated by rice, accounts for about half of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and provides 80 per cent of total employment.

On the streets of what remains is one of Asia’s sleepiest capitals, it’s hard to detect immediate pressure for change. But long-time Laos observer, senior Thai journalist, Kavi Chongkittavorn said that the Lao government was beginning to open up and trying to work closely with ASEAN countries. “The Lao has ended its isolation when it joined the alliance of Southeast countries, ASEAN and now the biggest challenge for the Lao government is to work more closely and openly with the rest of region and world,” said Chongkittavorn while adding that the Lao government had benefited from regional cooperation.

In some respects, that seems true. At UNDP Human Development Index (HDI), Lao has shown consistent improvement being ranked 141 out of 173 in 1993 and climbing to 133 by 2007. And the World Bank in its Global Economic Prospects 2008 estimated that Laos’ gross domestic product (GDP) was expected to see growth of 7.9 per cent in the year 2008, which was higher than Indonesia (6.3 per cent) and Philippines (6.2 per cent). National Socio-Economic Development Plan (NSEDP) predicts that the country could achieve the MDG target of reducing the proportion of people living below the poverty line by 2015.

According to the Ministry of Planning and Foreign Investment of Laos, the foreign investments in the country has now passed six billion dollar mark, with Thailand leading the way by investing more than 1,355 million dollars in 169 projects, followed by China with 1,138 million dollars in 237 projects and Vietnam with 535 million dollars in 120 projects. However, China is expected to surpass Thailand in 2008, becoming number one investor in Laos.

Savankhone Razmountry is the editor-in-chief of Vientiane Times, a government owned newspaper. He said, “Despite the government’s efforts and commitment to the development of the country and social upliftment of its people, the foreign media is still giving negative coverage to Lao, which is unfortunate.”

“It is not good that we should criticise all the time. Rather, we should encourage change and try to help each other onto the ladder of development,” Razmountry further added.

Today Laos is banking on the rich natural resource like water to boost its economy and infrastructure. Already under construction, the Nam Theun 2 dam is one of the biggest projects in the region. Located in the central Lao provinces of Khammuane and Bolikhamzy, the $1.45 billion project will get completed at the end of 2009. The World Bank sees this as a model project, and it said that the money earned from this dam would help Lao to alleviate poverty. Thailand alone plans to import more than 90 per cent of the power from the dam, earning the Lao government about 1.9 billion dollars over the next 25 years.

“For Laos, hydro-electric power is a highly lucrative venture. It is going to bring lot of development and prosperity in our country. The money generated from this could be used to alleviate poverty,” said Razmountry.

But there are serious questions as to whether hydroelectric power projects will truly benefit the locals, or simply help make their government richer. For decades, the Lao government with socialist ideology threw money on poverty - only to find that much of it was wasted through corruption and mismanagement. A foreign businessman in Vientiane put it like this: “The problem in Laos is not lack of money and foreign investment, but mismanagement and corruption.”

Many local entrepreneurs are not satisfied with the government. Taikeo Sayavongkeokhamdy, who owns Taikeo Textiles Gallery in Vientiane, spoke with dignity and elegance about her predicament. “I want to spread my business outside Lao and involve more people into it. There is a good market for our handcrafts. But we need more help and support from the government,” she said without criticising the government.

We left the Textiles Gallery and proceeded through the city. The streets are abuzz with people, energy and bad driving. There is a new openness to life, as the government is bringing much-needed revenue into the country’s fledgling economy, after years of political seclusion. Now, the challenge before the government is that it has to make sure that the common people of Laos are not left behind in the development. If the country’s leaders can’t provide prosperity, then people like Pheng Tanisay, know better than to complain.

“We want our country to develop like Thailand and our other neighbours,” Pheng said as he rose from his knees. “I don’t want my children or grandchildren to face the same hardships and difficulties, which I faced in my life. They should have good career and life,” he added.